Sans Faceted Fisi 2 is a bold, normal width, monoline, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: display, branding, headlines, posters, sportswear, futuristic, technical, sporty, industrial, angular, speed, precision, modernity, impact, tech feel, chamfered, faceted, slanted, compact, high-contrast.
An obliqued, monoline sans built from sharp planar segments instead of smooth curves. Strokes keep a consistent thickness, while corners are heavily chamfered, producing octagonal counters and clipped terminals throughout. Proportions are compact with squared shoulders and wide apertures; round letters like O, C, and G read as faceted polygons. The rhythm is energetic and slightly condensed in feel, with crisp diagonals and a generally upright structure that’s pushed forward by the strong slant.
Best suited to short-to-medium display settings where its angular detailing stays visible: headlines, posters, logos, product names, and UI or game graphics that want a technical edge. It can also work for labels and wayfinding in controlled sizes, especially when you want a robust, engineered feel rather than a neutral text voice.
The faceted geometry and forward lean give the face a fast, engineered tone that feels at home in tech and motorsport contexts. Its sharp cuts and angular curves suggest precision and toughness, reading as modern, assertive, and slightly sci‑fi without becoming ornamental.
This design appears intended to translate an italic grotesque skeleton into a faceted, machined aesthetic—replacing curves with crisp cuts to create a distinctive, high-energy texture. The consistent stroke weight and repeated chamfer motif aim for strong silhouette recognition and a cohesive industrial look across letters and figures.
Uppercase forms are constructed with bold chamfers and simplified joins, while lowercase keeps the same angular language, with single-storey shapes and clipped curves that preserve clarity. Numerals follow the same polygonal logic, with squared, cut-in corners that maintain a cohesive, mechanical texture in mixed alphanumeric settings.